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HILLARY IS ON THE VERGE OF CRYING
Duration: 3:25Source: YouTube
OHIO Democratic Debate, February 26, 2008.At last they met in Ohio as Hillary demanded in her 'Shame on you Barack Obama, Meet me in Ohio' speech.In Cleveland, Obama questions Hillary's so-called Experience16,000 REPUBLICANS IN CUYAHOGA CROSSED OVER AND VOTED DEMOCRATIC IN PRIMARY:http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/031...A Shrillary supporter brings an establishment-friendly Kennedy-killing scenario to the attention of voters:No matter who wins the remaining primaries, there's no way for Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton to capture enough delegates to reach the magic number of 2,025 needed to secure the Democratic nomination. The decision will then fall to the superdelegates, elected officials and party people often demonized in the media as hacks or backroom operators. A majority of them will swing behind one or the other candidate—likely Hillary Clinton—boosting her over the top even if she lags behind Barack Obama in the pledged delegate count. And they will do this dastardly deed behind closed doors, in the electronic equivalent of the smoke-filled room, plotting over cell phones and making their decision based on implied favors and self-interest. This is the nightmare scenario. The good news for Democrats is that the excitement of two historic candidates generated hundreds of thousands of new voters; the bad news is half of them won't show up in November. But wait, things could get worse, or maybe better, depending on your perspective. What happens if the superdelegates are just like the rest of the voters—i.e., they can't definitively decide between these two candidates? "What happens if they split the superdelegates?" asks an adviser to the Clinton campaign. The roughly 350 superdelegates who have not yet endorsed are all free agents. There's nothing that says they have to act in concert, and they'll work to avoid anything that fuels conspiracy theories. "My real worry is there is no back room," says this adviser. Clinton says she'll go all the way to the convention in August. If there's a stalemate, the superdelegates could decide to pass on the first ballot to test the candidates' strength at that juncture. We could then be way back to the future, the first time in the modern reform age that a candidate is not chosen on the first ballot. (Continued here) http://www.newsweek.com/id/119851
Rating: (0 ratings) Views: 39 Added: Mar 2, 2008
Category: News Author: aakozanoglu
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